Division of Bass (state)

The electoral division of Bass is one of the five electorates in the Tasmanian House of Assembly, it includes north-east Tasmania and Flinders Island. Bass takes its name from the British naval surgeon and explorer of Australia: George Bass. The division shares its name and boundaries with the federal division of Bass.

Bass
TasmaniaHouse of Assembly

Map showing the Division of Bass, as of the Tasmanian state election, 2018.[1]

StateTasmania
Created1909
MPLara Alexander (Liberal)
Michael Ferguson (Liberal)
Janie Finlay (Labor)
Michelle O'Byrne (Labor)
Simon Wood (Liberal)
PartyLabor (2), Liberal (3)
NamesakeGeorge Bass
Electors78,182 (2021)
Area7,976 km2 (3,079.6 sq mi)
DemographicMixed
Division of Bass

Bass and the other House of Assembly electoral divisions are each represented by five members elected under the Hare-Clark electoral system.

History and electoral profile

Bass was created in 1909 and includes the city of Launceston and towns in the states north east including: Scottsdale, Lilydale, St Helens, George Town and others.[2]

Representation

Distribution of seats

Members for Bass

Year Member Party Member Party Member Party Member Party Member Party Member Party Member Party
1909
6 seats
(1909–1959)
  Thomas Bakhap Anti-Socialist   James Guy Labor   Robert Sadler Liberal Democrat   Charles Howroyd Labor   Albert Solomon Anti-Socialist   Richard McKenzie Anti-Socialist
1912   Liberal   George Becker Labor   Liberal   Liberal
1913 Robert Sadler Liberal Arthur Anderson Labor John Hayes Liberal
1914 Alexander Marshall Liberal
1915 James McDonald Labor
1916 Allan Guy Labor
1917   Nationalist   Nationalist   Nationalist   Nationalist
1917 James Newton Nationalist
1919
1922   Jens Jensen Independent Labor
1923 George Shields Nationalist
1925   Liberal
1925   Victor Shaw Labor   Claude James Liberal Henry Thomson Nationalist
1928   Nationalist   Nationalist
1928 John Ockerby Nationalist
1929 Thomas Davies Labor
1931   Robert Murphy Nationalist Howard Barber Nationalist
1933 Herbert Postle Nationalist
1934   John McDonald Labor Allen Hollingsworth Nationalist
1936 John Madden Labor
1937   Eric Howroyd Labor
1941 Frank Marriott Nationalist
1942 John Quintal Labor
1945 Alan Welsh Labor
1946   Liberal   Independent
1946 Reg Turnbull Labor   Bill Beattie Liberal Fred Marriott Liberal   Alexander Atkins Labor
1948   John Orchard Liberal
1950   Claude Barnard Labor   John Steer Liberal
1954 Bill Beattie Liberal
1955
1956 Alexander Atkins Labor
1957 John Madden Labor
1959   Mac Le Fevre Labor   Independent
1961   Wallace Fraser Labor James McGowen Liberal Max Bushby Liberal
1964 John Steer Liberal
1968 James Henty Liberal
1969 Allan Foster Labor Michael Barnard Labor   Timothy Barrenger Liberal
1972 David Farquhar Labor   Mac Le Fevre Labor Neil Pitt Liberal
1974 Harry Holgate Labor
1976 Gill James Labor   Jim Mooney Liberal Neil Robson Liberal
1979   Mary Willey Labor John Beswick Liberal
1981   Independent
1982   Brendan Lyons Liberal
1984 Peter Patmore Labor
1986 Peter Rae Liberal Frank Madill Liberal
1989 Jim Cox Labor   Lance Armstrong Greens
1992   Tony Benneworth Liberal Gill James Labor Sue Napier Liberal
1996   Jim Cox Labor
1998
5 seats
(1998–present)
5 seats
(1998–present)
2000 David Fry Liberal
2002   Kim Booth Greens Kathryn Hay Labor Peter Gutwein Liberal
2006 Michelle O'Byrne Labor
2010 Brian Wightman Labor Michael Ferguson Liberal
2014   Sarah Courtney Liberal
2015 Andrea Dawkins Greens
2018   Jennifer Houston Labor
2021 Janie Finlay Labor
2022 Lara Alexander Liberal Simon Wood Liberal

See also

References

  1. Map data: Electoral boundaries from Administrative Boundaries [May 2016] ©PSMA Australia Limited licensed by the Commonwealth of Australia under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence (CC BY 4.0).
  2. Bass Archived 2013-04-11 at the Wayback Machine, Tasmanian Electoral Commission

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